A bit of poetry:
...Around 2014 we converted the whole office into VR. At first this was difficult, because the hardware was expensive and cumbersome. I still remember our first cave, where 5 or 6 persons would squeeze into a 10 foot cube, wearing big heavy spectacles and brandishing our wands around. Clients would come to our office to immerse themselves into this 3D environment and our way of doing architecture gradually changed...

A bit of poetry:
...Around 2014 we converted the whole office into VR. /......................... Clients would come to our office to immerse themselves into this 3D environment and our way of doing architecture gradually changed...

Considering my many frustrations with the slow pace of technical progress in architecture it is nice to read something optimistic. While I believe that simulation (as opposed to simple graphic representation) can and should progress using today's computer technology, I agree that true virtualization and interaction will not be realized until we move beyond the keyboard-mouse-screen paradigm._________________Regards,
Geoff Briggs
I & I Design

We don't need maps to get from A to B, so why do we need plans to build a building. Everything in the model has its coordinates. Perhaps the guys on site only need a voice in an earpiece saying, "...up a bit, left a bit. Put it there." Maybe accompanied by a beep like the parking assistance on your car.

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